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Discus

Nicknamed the “pompadour fish,” for their distinctive look, discus have a round, flat body similar in shape to a disk. They vary in color, donning hues of green, red, brown and blue and have dark vertical stripes. These stripes serve a dual purpose: to aid communication within a school of discus and to camouflage the fish from predators.

To reproduce, male and female discus together choose and clean a spot where the female will lay between 80 and 400 eggs. The male fertilizes the eggs, and both parents guard the eggs until they hatch. After hatching, the fry eat the slime off their parents’ skin until they’re old enough to eat larger pieces of food. Juvenile discus can live in groups but as they age will start to form bonded pairs and become territorial against other couples.

Diet

A discus’ diet includes worms, small crustaceans, insects, insect larvae and plant matter.

Size

This fish grows approximately 6 to 8 inches in height and length.

Range

Found in slow-moving freshwater, discus live in tributaries in the Amazon River Basin. Schools of discus hide in underwater debris away from predators.